Strikeforce at Playboy Mansion II recap and final thoughts

"Strikeforce at the Mansion II" went off last night from the Playboy Mansion in Beverly Hills, California. After the fight card got drilled with injuries in the weeks leading up to the event, there were fans who felt that the match ups were watered down and that the show would be a disappointment.
They might have been right about the less than stellar matchmaking, but the event itself was nowhere near disappointing.
The main event featured UFC veteran Joe "Diesel" Riggs taking on Pride FC veteran Kazuo Misaki, who was making his Strikeforce debut. The fight never once made it to the mat. Misaki chose to stand with Riggs and the strategy appeared to backfire midway through the second round when Riggs floored him with a big right hand.
Riggs pounced on him, but Misaki recovered right away and quickly got back to his feet. Almost immediately after standing up he returned fire with a right hand of his own, dropping Riggs to the mat. "Diesel" covered up and got to full guard, but referee Josh Rosenthal felt his arms up defense wasn't sufficient enough to handle the Misaki onslaught and he stopped the fight.
Riggs made it obvious that he didn't agree with the decision and it looked like he might have had a point. But the referee's decision is final, and in the end Misaki was successful in his Strikeforce debut.
The only Strikeforce champion competing on the card was lightweight champ Josh "The Punk" Thomson. He faced Lion's Den trainee Ashe Bowman in a non-title affair, and he made quick work of "The Archer" with a first round technical knockout.
Former champion Gilbert Melendez was on hand to help call the fight in the announcer's booth, making it very clear more than once that he intends to get his belt back as soon as possible.
Who wouldn't want to see that rematch?
Cory "The One" Devela used his reach advantage to avoid Terry Martin's power for most of their middleweight bout. And he was probably ahead on the judges scorecards through two rounds, but he wasn't able to stay away from the powerful Chicago native in the third where Martin finally closed the distance and landed a huge fight-ending left hand.
The knockout was the eleventh of Terry Martin's career.
Mitsuhiro "The Endless Fighter" Ishida didn't have to live up to his nickname tonight. He dispatched American Kickboxing Academy product Justin Wilcox in relatively easy fashion by slapping an early first round armbar on him.
He did, however, live up to the billing as one of the best lightweights in the world in his Strikeforce debut. A rematch with Gilbert Melendez or a shot at division champion Josh Thomson could be on the near horizon.
Trevor Prangley used his extensive wrestling background to score numerous takedowns and from there he imposed some nasty ground and pound on his way to a unanimous decision win over a very tough Anthony Ruiz.
We'll more than likely see Prangley back in the middleweight division for his next fight. And Strikeforce has some interesting match ups for him there, including Kazuo Misaki and division champion Cung Le.
Luke Stewart finally got a chance to fight again after suffering the first loss of his career almost six months ago. He weathered the early storm from an aggressive Jesse Juarez and methodically worked his way to a late first round submission victory.
Expect to see a lot more of Luke on future Strikeforce cards -- he's got a lot of talent and a sick jiu-jitsu game.
The production of the event was surprisingly really good. The Sherdog.com live stream was very clean. The video was clear, the audio was crisp and there weren't long intermissions between fights. They kept a steady flow of action, which is the way a mixed martial arts event should go.
Lon McEachern and Ken Shamrock were in the announcing booth, and believe it or not, they made a pretty good team. I know I'll probably take a lot of heat for saying this just because of who he is, but I thought Shamrock was at the top of his game and did a nice job with the color commentary. He was informative and more often than not, right on the money with his analysis.
Overall "Strikeforce at the Mansion II" was on par with most Strikeforce shows. There wasn't anything too spectacular, but nothing really worth complaining about either. The card wasn't filled with too many competitive match ups, but there were plenty of exciting finishes.
As usual, it was another solid event from Strikeforce.
Next up is Strikeforce: "Payback" at the Broomfield Events Center in Denver, Colo., on October 3 live on HDNet. Don't miss it.
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9 comments
Comments
Shamrock, MacEachern and even the ring announcer had no idea who some of the fighters were. Shamrock looked bad when he was putting down his own teammate Bowman during and after the fight, misprouncing everyone’s names and referring to Terry Martin as “Martin” the whole time. This guy has been hit in the head too many times, imagine what he’ll be like after he faces Kimbo.
At one point the ring announcer referred to Justin Wilcox as a cast member of TUF5 to which Wilcox looked stunned and shook his head. Lol, for the next show I hope all three of these guys are replaced with some real commentators.
by RUSH on Sep 21, 2008 9:55 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
“At one point the ring announcer referred to Justin Wilcox as a cast member of TUF5 to which Wilcox looked stunned and shook his head.”
AHAHA I noticed this too and thought it was hilarious.
by Andy C on Sep 21, 2008 4:17 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
McEachren should stick to the WSOP. The Wilcox thing was funny too. I know he has a win over Gabe Ruediger that was on season 5, but thats the only connection to that season that he has, to my knowledge anyway. Ken reffering to Herb Dean as Cecil (Peoples) was pretty funny too. What are trying to say Ken? LOL!
by the_mexicutioner on Sep 21, 2008 10:07 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
What I also ment about the Wilcox thing is that one might say that they confused him with Seth Petruzzeli because of the name Silverback, but Seth was on Season 2 and is much bigger. Laughable.
by the_mexicutioner on Sep 21, 2008 10:53 AM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
I thought the show was O.K. It wasn’t that bad, wasn’t that good, just O.K. The biggest problem I had was it ended at about 1:30 AM ET. Thanks Sherdog for the show.
by iagoof22 on Sep 21, 2008 10:16 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
THe problem was that the card featured a bunch of mismatches. U wouold have to be an idiot to not know that Misaki, Ishida and Thompson were going to win their fights
by john on Sep 21, 2008 12:42 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
After all the KOs he’s absorbed in the last few years, Ken is living on a planet of one.
by PW on Sep 21, 2008 10:23 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
The stoppage by Rosenthal was one of the worst I have seen. It really was a joke. Riggs had his hands up, protecting his face. Furthermore, NONE of the punches by Misaki were getting through – none.
by Brutha V on Sep 21, 2008 1:23 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
How many times did Shamrock say “so-and-so needs to take this to the ground” and variations thereof? He better take his own advice on Oct. 4, unless he’s been paid excessively not to.
by Joe Smith on Sep 21, 2008 4:12 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs

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